Blended Sportswear Fabrics
The best of both worlds — cotton's comfort paired with polyester's durability, or spandex's stretch woven in. Custom blend ratios engineered for your exact performance needs in 40+ countries.
What Are Blended Fabrics?
Blended fabrics combine two or more fiber types into a single textile, engineered to deliver properties that neither fiber could achieve alone. The most common blends in sportswear pair cotton's natural softness with polyester's durability, or add spandex for stretch and recovery.
We manufacture poly-cotton (TC & CVC), tri-blends (cotton/poly/rayon), cotton-spandex, and poly-spandex blends — with fully customizable ratios. Need a 70/30 instead of 65/35? A 95/5 instead of 92/8? We produce it.
Every blend batch is tested for blend ratio accuracy (±2%), shrinkage, colorfastness, pilling, and tensile strength before shipping.
Available Blend Compositions
Each blend serves a distinct purpose. Choose the right combination for your product category.
GSM Range & Use Cases
Blends span the full weight spectrum — from featherlight training tees to heavyweight track suits.
Baselayer
Running
School Uniform
Sweatshirts
Jackets
Outerwear
Structured
Stock & Custom Colors
Poly-cotton blends create beautiful heathered effects. 14 stock colors plus custom dye lots.
Engineered Advantages
Blends don't compromise — they combine the strengths of each fiber while canceling weaknesses.
Balanced Properties
Cotton's softness + polyester's strength in one fabric — no single-fiber compromise.
Cost Optimized
Replacing 35% of cotton with polyester reduces cost significantly while maintaining feel.
Reduced Shrinkage
Polyester stabilizes cotton fibers — blends shrink 50–70% less than 100% cotton.
Improved Wicking
Polyester channels moisture away while cotton absorbs it — faster drying than pure cotton.
Heathered Aesthetic
Poly-cotton's differential dye uptake creates premium heathered color effects naturally.
Dimensional Stability
Less stretching and distortion during sewing — holds shape better than pure cotton knits.
Wrinkle Resistant
Polyester content reduces wrinkling — garments look neater out of the wash and during wear.
Fully Tunable
Adjust any ratio to prioritize cost, feel, durability, stretch, or printability — your call.
What Blends Are Used For
Blends are the most versatile fabrics — used across nearly every sportswear and casual wear category.
Which Blend Should You Choose?
A side-by-side breakdown of our three most popular blend types — so you pick the right one first time.
| Property | 65/35 TC | 60/40 CVC | Tri-Blend |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hand Feel | Slightly crisp | Soft, cottony CVC | Premium, silky Tri |
| Durability | Excellent TC | Very Good | Good |
| Shrinkage | Minimal TC | Low | Low–Moderate |
| Sublimation | Good TC | Acceptable | Poor |
| Moisture Wicking | Good TC | Moderate | Moderate |
| Heathered Look | Subtle | Moderate | Pronounced Tri |
| Cost Per Meter | Lowest TC | Moderate | Highest |
| Pilling Resistance | Excellent TC | Very Good | Good |
| Breathability | Good | Better CVC | Best Tri |
| Best For | Team kits, promo tees | Polos, school uniforms | Premium fashion, retail |
Honest Assessment
- Combines the best properties of multiple fibers in one fabric
- 15–25% more cost-effective than 100% cotton at similar performance
- Significantly less shrinkage than pure cotton — holds shape after washing
- Better wrinkle resistance — garments look presentable with less ironing
- Heathered color effects come naturally from differential dye uptake
- Fully tunable — adjust ratios to prioritize any property
- More dimensionally stable during cutting and sewing
- Accepts widest range of decoration methods — screen, sublimation, DTG, embroidery
- Can't achieve 100% of any single fiber's peak property
- Sublimation quality degrades as cotton percentage increases
- Tri-blends cost nearly as much as 100% cotton with less purity perception
- Blend ratio accuracy can vary ±2% between production runs
- Not ideal for applications requiring extreme specialization
- Recycling blended fabrics is more complex than single-fiber textiles
Printing Methods by Blend
Not every method works on every blend. Here's what we recommend based on your composition.
Sublimation
Works best on 65/35 TC blends. Colors are slightly softer than 100% polyester but still vibrant. On 50/50 or lower poly content, we apply pre-treatment for acceptable results.
Screen Printing
The universal workhorse — produces excellent results on any blend ratio. Plastisol or water-based inks bond well with both cotton and polyester fibers in the mix.
Direct-to-Garment
Best on CVC (60/40) and tri-blends where cotton is the dominant face fiber. DTG inks bond with cotton fibers for photographic quality with a soft hand.
Engineer Your Perfect Blend
Every variable is adjustable — from fiber ratio to knit construction to finish.
Blend Ratio
Any ratio — 70/30, 55/45, 80/20, or even a 4-fiber blend. We blend to your spec.
Knit Type
Jersey, interlock, piqué, rib, or mesh — same blend, completely different fabric.
Yarn Count
20s to 40s — finer yarns for lighter fabrics, coarser for heavier textures.
GSM Target
Same blend can hit 140 or 280 GSM — controlled through yarn count and knit density.
Finish Treatment
Pre-shrink, bio-polish, anti-pilling, anti-microbial, softener, or enzyme wash.
Sublimation Prep
Special pre-treatment for cotton-heavy blends to improve sublimation dye uptake.
Ordering Process
From first contact to delivery — a streamlined 5-step process.
Inquiry
Day 0Samples
3–5 DaysApproval
1–2 DaysProduction
15–21 DaysDelivery
4–7 DaysMOQ, Capacity & Lead Time
Frequently Asked Questions
Explore the Raw Fibers
Understand the individual fibers that go into our blends.
Ready to Start Your Blend Order?
Get a detailed quote with pricing, lead time, and free fabric samples — typically within 4 business hours.